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Strictly G.I.: The WWII Letters of Cpl. Wanda M. Renn (English Edition) Formato Kindle
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"Ti preghiamo di riprovare" | 5,38 € | — |
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Strictly G.I. is a historical account of World War II from one of the first female soldiers...
Created from an actual collection of letters and Vmail. Wanda served in the 149th WAAC Post Hq. Co., the first group of Womens Auxiliary Army Corps (WAAC) during World War II to be sent overseas. "Strictly G.I." is a phrase Wanda used to describe herself. She advanced quickly in the ranks, and shared her proudest moments in the letters, beginning with her initial training in Des Moines to marches before the general in North Africa. She also shares more humorous moments and interesting observations.
Here is a quote from one Vmail:
"We have a radio in our “room” and whenever we get a short wave station from the states, it makes a person stop and think. You don’t know – you can’t possibly know what war really is – in all reality."
The letters document Wanda's training in 1942 at Fort Des Moines, Iowa to the dispatch of her unit overseas to French North Africa. Wanda's portrayal of life as a teletypist is lively and descriptive. Also unfolding in the letters is her concern for her male counterparts, and her growing affection for one special soldier.
Women in America will be inspired Wanda's witt and resilience. Unlike servicemen, the auxiliaries could not receive overseas pay or government life insurance. If they became sick or wounded, they would not receive veterans’ hospitalization. If they were killed, their parents received no death gratuity.
Enjoy this first person account of WWII from the perspective of a hard-working and very human female soldier.
NOTE: This sequential set of letters are from Wanda only. Any return correspondence from family and friends has been lost to time. Because Wanda's letters home are historical, the author hasn't recreated any letters written to Wanda.
- LinguaInglese
- Data di pubblicazione2 aprile 2011
- Dimensioni file4577 KB
Descrizione prodotto
L'autore
Dettagli prodotto
- ASIN : B004V02GCA
- Editore : Marquette Press; 3° edizione (2 aprile 2011)
- Lingua : Inglese
- Dimensioni file : 4577 KB
- Da testo a voce : Abilitato
- Screen Reader : Supportato
- Miglioramenti tipografici : Abilitato
- X-Ray : Abilitato
- Word Wise : Abilitato
- Lunghezza stampa : 159 pagine
- Recensioni dei clienti:
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Patricia Arnold, the granddaughter of the author of the letters has done us a great service in that she published these letters as they were and did not, as so often happens in such cases, make editorial changes to the original letters. Grammar, spelling, sentence structure, etc. are as they were. Arnold has not changed the content one bit. I read a tremendous number of first hand accounts written by soldiers and I can tell you that for me this method was quite refreshing. Not all war accounts are written by people such as William Manchester; not all were professionally skilled writers.
We get here a first hand account of a very young girl, away from home for the first time and thrown into a situation which was less than great. Attitudes toward military women at that time were rather derogatory and primitive to say the least and Renn has addressed this matter quite well. My mother served in this war as a Nurse and like so many member of her generation who went through this ordeal, was quite tight lipped about the whole thing. She seldom, if ever spoke of her experiences even when prompted. This little work allowed me to “see inside” the conditions and attitudes of the time. For me this was a rather special read.
The letters were surprisingly well written and for the most part comprehensive. While much has changed in the military over the years since WWII, much remains the same. I am retired military myself and spent quite a few years alone in foreign countries both in and out of war zones. The daily concerns I had were much the same as Renns – worried about receiving mail was number one on the list as well as wondering if family was receiving her letters. Food was a big issue as well as comfortable (or lack of comfortable) living quarters, friendships made and of course in the uncertainly and loneliness. I suspect if we read the letters of ancient Roman soldiers we would have found the same. All in all though, Renn’s letters are amazingly upbeat in nature – this was a fascinating lady.
Now folks, this is a collection of everyday letters. If you are looking for a novel type book; a work filled with high action and typical G.I. B.S. stories, you need to look elsewhere. There are no explosions, high episodes of physical drama – well, there is no John Wayne stuff. No, you get the story straight from a young girls mind; her observations and opinions – her daily life.
There must be thousands of stashes of letters such as this from past war time experiences and I do wish that more people would follow Patricia Arnold’s led and share them with us. The WWII generation is quickly departing as the Korean generation and when you thing about it, my generation, i.e. Vietnam, are getting pretty long in the tooth ourselves. This is history and needs to be preserved. My hat is off to Ms. Arnold for sharing these candid letters with us.
Don Blankenship
The Ozarks

I really wish that we (the reader) would have gotten either a better introduction or conclusion that gives us an idea of what happened later in her life and maybe answered some of the topics and questions that had been introduced in the letters because it leaves you wanting to know- what happened to this person? What took place after? How does what happened affect her later on?
All in all a wonderful read.


